Coronavirus Hospitalizations Of Youths Up 23% In Florida
As Florida schools prepare to reopen next month under a push from Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis touting the need for in-person instruction, state health officials reported disturbing new statistics about the increase in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations among the state’s children.
The state had 31,150 such cases reported among people under 18 as of July 24, the Florida Department of Health disclosed Sunday. That’ represents a 34% jump in such cases from July 16.
Perhaps even more concerning is the spike in youth hospitalized with COVID-19 during that time period. The latest data shows 303 youth hospitalizations, up 23% from July 16. About one-third of those cases are in children 14-17 years old, followed by 67 cases among children younger under one.
The data is at odds with the narrative President Donald Trump’s administration continues to promote that the disease has a negligible effect on school-aged children. Trump and his education secretary, Betsy DeVos, have stressed that schools should prioritize a return to in-person classroom settings, while allowing that some exceptions may be necessary.
“They don’t catch it easily; they don’t bring it home easily,” Trump said at a press briefing last week. “And if they do catch it, they get better fast.”
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany also has dismissed the risk of reopening schools with in-person instruction. “We don’t think our children should be locked up at home with devastating consequences when it’s perfectly safe for them to go to school,” she said at a recent White House briefing.
The overall rate of positive cases among youth in Florida is 14.4%, the state health department said Sunday. The World Health Organization has advised that governments track 14 consecutive days of a positivity rate below 5% before easing any virus-related restrictions.
But DeSantis is continuing to strongly urge all Florida school districts to resume in-person instruction in...